lemur wrote:and yet: theres always some schmuck banging out huge beats from his empty dome to nobody but his drunk hungover friends in camp.

This reminds me of last year's Element 11. Some useless DJ set up some sort of spinning booth -- complete with with flashing lights and all the jazz -- in a far corner of the camping area, inconveniently near where we had set up kit. He then decided to leave it on auto-play all night, where the only thing it did -- besides annoying the fuck out of me when I tried to sleep -- was bathe a bank of Port-A-Johns in flashing lights and beats.

"The essence of tyranny is not iron law. It is capricious law." -- Christopher Hitchens

Please don't think that the response that was elicited from the minimal information in your original post reflects in any manner what you'll experience on the playa. BRC is full of absolutely wonderful, welcoming people, including many of the people on ePlaya who are incredible contributors to the actual event and warmly friendly in person! Parties have music, most people realize this, please have your camp throw whatever parties you and your campmates desire. Play whatever music you guys and gals like during your parties, everyone has different tastes.

Last year, we were beside a cool, small camp that blasted out some hour long sets of ABBA and B52's onto our street, "maybe" ignoring the bureaucracy's rules, while acting thoroughly within the original spirit of this event in the desert. Heck, to ignore the bureaucracy's rules is why the event moved to the desert in the first place. Everyone who wanted to go by on our street had to dance through our crowd, fun times for anyone who liked interactivity and participation! And, yes, there were a few neighbors, mostly older, who said, "Next year I'm camping in Hushville." To each, their own, which is one of the beauties of the city and of the event, most everyone can find what they enjoy, as well as contributing and participating in whatever manner may move them.

Best wishes and have a great time on the playa!

(BTW, per your original question, protect the amp from playa dust. When it gets moist, it absolutely destroys electronics, especially any that have high voltage switching circuits/power supplies in them)

Please don't think that the response that was elicited from the minimal information in your original post reflects in any manner what you'll experience on the playa. BRC is full of absolutely wonderful, welcoming people, including many of the people on ePlaya who are incredible contributors to the actual event and warmly friendly in person! Parties have music, most people realize this, please have your camp throw whatever parties you and your campmates desire. Play whatever music you guys and gals like during your parties, everyone has different tastes.

Last year, we were beside a cool, small camp that blasted out some hour long sets of ABBA and B52's onto our street, "maybe" ignoring the bureaucracy's rules, while acting thoroughly within the original spirit of this event in the desert. Heck, to ignore the bureaucracy's rules is why the event moved to the desert in the first place. Everyone who wanted to go by on our street had to dance through our crowd, fun times for anyone who liked interactivity and participation! And, yes, there were a few neighbors, mostly older, who said, "Next year I'm camping in Hushville." To each, their own, which is one of the beauties of the city and of the event, most everyone can find what they enjoy, as well as contributing and participating in whatever manner may move them.

Best wishes and have a great time on the playa!

(BTW, per your original question, protect the amp from playa dust. When it gets moist, it absolutely destroys electronics, especially any that have high voltage switching circuits/power supplies in them)

thats not the only thing that destroys electronics.

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CornMan wrote:I think a lot of people just want to be a part of the bigger spectacle and feel the louder beats. If you had Skrillex on stage jumping and waving his arms around but a very minor local DJ controlling the music behind the scenes, very few people in the huge crowd would know the difference.

[media]

Yeah, agree with that. DJing is hardly some massive skill. Even Deadmau5 has publicly acknowledged (garnering a lot of hatred in the DJ community) that it's mainly just pushing a few buttons on stage. A monkey can sync the BPM of a couple of tracks using software. There's some skill in live track selection to fit the mood of the audience, but I'm unsure how many DJs actually do that vs. full-on pre-programmed sets. It's composing that is the real skill in EDM, and many DJs don't compose.

I encourage the OP to bring what he has to offer to the party. I just think he's going to be disappointed to find out that nobody wants to dance to his tunes barring his own campmates.

A) An awesome group/camp/artcar/whatever that handed out stereo receiver headphones to participants and then transmitted their music to the headphones. I remember walking up to this dancing group of people and it was totally silent - yet everyone was dancing and moving. Thinking WTF? Then the flashbulb went off in my head and I smiled a lot.

B) A camp/group/whatever that set up a SMALL amp, microphones, various musical instruments and invited people to jam. Five or six disparate people (with musical ability) made some of the best music I heard and made me want to dance.

The next morning you will wake up pretty much your old self except that a very unusual 16 hours will have been added to your store of life experience.

I put a 300W solar powered sound system on my bike, so I could ride along the streets slowly looking for a group of people who were enjoying the stuff I was playing. Then I'd park, play a few tunes, have a drink with them, and move on. I could also head out into the middle of deep playa and enjoy the shit that only I like, loud, without bothering anyone.Here's what it looks like:http://www.cathodecorner.com/loudbike/

BeeWeeDee wrote:B) A camp/group/whatever that set up a SMALL amp, microphones, various musical instruments and invited people to jam. Five or six disparate people (with musical ability) made some of the best music I heard and made me want to dance.

gaminwench wrote:2011, Esplanade...50' frontage,3 couples, one sound system, one tiny art car with huge sound system,ugly, angry music.They'd turn on the system, then drive away in the car.Hours later they'd return, park the car aiming into the neighbors' art installation,run awful sound, to no one.They were never in camp,ugly, angry sound ran all the time.(except when neighbors unplugged the system)

We called them 'Sliver of noise'.

Don't be this guy.

Radically borrowing their extension cord is obviously the best solution to this problem.